Home > Food >

Conan O'Brien's 'Hot Ones' is burning up the internet

Apr 16, 2024 05:01:46 AM
Tag :   Inter   Conan   Brien   Ones   burning

By now, someone's probably sent you the clip of Conan O'Brien on the internet series Hot Ones, going full chaos gremlin: red-cheeked, sweating, drooling, his face smeared with hot sauce and bellowing about seizing the moment ("This isn't a bit! This is LIIIIIFE!"). He looks crazed. If you haven't yet seen that clip, sit tight. It's going viral, as the kids used to say.

And it's not the first time. You know that Paul Rudd meme, where he grins widely, radiating warmth and camaraderie ("Hey. Look at us.")? That's from Hot Ones, too. Ditto Jennifer Lawrence panicking and laugh-sobbing ("What do you mean? What do you MEAN?").

Conan O

Television 'Conan O'Brien Needs A Friend' Is A Joke Name For A Podcast — Sort Of

Now it's Conan's turn. He turned up on the show to promote his new Max travel series and wasted no time seizing control of the interview and the premise itself. O'Brien is known as a performer who can't help but be "on" all the time, no matter the size of his audience. When he wrote on The Simpsons, he and his colleagues in the writers' room would be sitting around a table; they'd be pitching jokes, and he'd be miming an elaborate routine in which he was an astronaut strapping himself into a rocket ship – all for the benefit of the guys across the table from him. On his podcast, Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend, he tosses out an incessant series of bits to the delight (mostly) of his producer and assistant. There's a restless, needy quality to his comedy that would be worrisome if his instincts weren't so sharp if he wasn't funny as he is.

The perfect guest?

But before we unpack how and why O'Brien just became the best Hot Ones guest ever, we need to consider the show itself.

The first time you heard the premise of Hot Ones, the YouTube series on which celebrities are interviewed by the affable and scrupulously well-prepared host Sean Evans as they consume a series of increasingly spicy buffalo wings, you probably thought it sounded like a dumb gimmick. Then you probably started poking around to see if any of your favorite celebrities had been a guest. Then you watched one episode. And then, it was all over.

There are entire Reddit forums dedicated to ranking which Hot Ones guests are "the best," but determining that involves a very subjective calculus. Some want to see guests melt down; others want them to power through without breaking a sweat. Some watch in the hope that they'll gain new insights into the personality of a given celebrity as the various hot sauces start to dissolve their pat, media-trained soundbites like the blood of the Xenomorph eats through the Nostromo.

The good news is that there's a Hot Ones episode for whatever you're looking for. Different guests react very differently, and your favorite episode may not be anyone else's.

YouTube

For me, a great guest has to come in with hubris – the excessive pride of tragic heroes – because they bring their own narrative arc to the endeavor. Because Idris Elba approached the challenge with dismissive bravado, his downfall – coughing, sweating, swearing, mock-threatening a producer – was all the more satisfying. Ditto Gordon Ramsay.

But it's also delightful when an episode seems to confirm your pre-existing impression of a guest. Padma Lakshmi stayed cool in every sense of the word as she answered Evans' questions and commented insightfully on the flavor profiles of the various sauces (even the infamous Da Bomb, which clocks in at 119,700 Scoville units and reportedly tastes as if kerosene were angry at you).

Elijah Wood, Tom Holland and Michael Cera demonstrated a deep knowledge of the show, endearing them to fans. Alton Brown brought a know-it-all diffidence, which was not particularly endearing. Key & Peele belong to that cohort of guests who turn on the host hilariously (see also: Shaq, Bill Burr, Lizzo, Michael Rapaport, Ed Helms). Lorde, Jenna Ortega, Charlize Theron and Rachael Ray weren't bothered by the heat.

Many guests have raved about interviewer Sean Evans over the years. Specifically, they've marveled at his questions, which are both deeply researched and novel. It's fun to watch celebrities who have repeatedly spent their careers answering the same questions on press junkets realize that they've just been asked a question about something they dearly love and no one else has ever asked them about.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Hot Ones (@hotones)

And it's true – Evans is a good interviewer. But as a host myself, I'd love to hear him give his researchers some of the love he gets from guests. And if I have any quibble with the show, it's that Evans is so thoroughly prepared that his questions always sound more like written English than spoken English; there's a formality in the wording that doesn't quite jibe with the looseness of the chemistry the show aims for.

Now, about that Conan episode.

Conan has catapulted himself to the top of the list of Hot Ones All-Stars because he knew exactly what he was getting into and what he had to do.

1. He came prepared
Related news

Copyright © 2020 PE News Internet Ventures. All rights reserved.Privacy Policy | About us